Where D.H. Lawrence was wrong about woman

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 18, 2024 | History

Where D.H. Lawrence was wrong about woman

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"David Holbrook has spent many years teaching D. H. Lawrence's works to students, while Lawrence has been a primary influence in Holbrook's novels and poetry. By degrees, however, he came to be suspicious of Lawrence's attempts to "teach us to be men and women," especially in the field of sex. So, Holbrook set out on a detailed analysis of Lawrence's whole oeuvre." "What he found was startling. From the beginning he found Lawrence haunted by a deep fear of woman, and by a hostility toward her, even in The White Peacock. In the great tragic novel Sons and Lovers, there are many clues to Lawrence's intense relationship with his mother. This predicament is illuminated by recent studies of gender from a psychoanalytic point of view. Holbrook finds that Lawrence's mother, in the absence of a real love relationship, and in her grief for her dead child, made Lawrence into her "idolised phallus." This phallus stalks through the short stories and especially through the versions of Lady Chatterly's Lover." "This element is to be found in the longer novels, in which Lawrence develops a personal myth in which his alter ego is depicted as the "man from the Infinite," who has a special role: to raise woman from the dead--in fact, to resurrect the dead mother. The reasons for this need are expressed with amazing clarity in Kangaroo, in which the Lawrence-like hero is haunted by a menacing mother in his dreams--the threat being that unless he gives her a meaningful life, she will blight his." "Lawrence's male characters are nearly all tormented by this kind of ghost, and his solution is to seek to exercise control over women. She may be put to death, as in The Fox and The Woman Who Rode Away. She may be sodomized and taken in contemptuous anger, as in Lady Chatterly's Lover, and is depicted as enjoying this. The enthusiasm for the sodomizing of woman is quite clearly there in The Rainbow, Women in Love, and Mr. Noon. Some critics have spoken of this as a "holy communion," but Holbrook sees it as a denial of woman, an avoidance of the matrix where the ghost of the dead mother lurks." "In the end, in The Plumed Serpent, an intelligent American woman submits herself to the fascistic domination of two murderers who are running a new religious-political campaign, while forfeiting even her capacity for orgasm. Everything in Lawrence's work leads to this false solution." "Yet such critics as F. R. Leavis commend Lawrence for his concepts of "manhood"--and even endorse such stories as The Virgin and the Gypsy, in which a duplicitous traveler seduces a young girl in vengeance on the middle class. Yet the politics behind this kind of propaganda are those of Otto Gross, the insane German sex revolutionary who was a sometime lover of Lawrence's wife, Frieda, and her sister. Mr. Noon reveals the confusion in Lawrence between the novelist squarely in the Anglo-Saxon tradition and the husband of Frieda." "No one who reads this book can ever again consider Lawrence's position "normative" or "celebratory" but will find it full of hate and death--despite his achievements--in his best work."--BOOK JACKET.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
380

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Where D.H. Lawrence was wrong about woman
Where D.H. Lawrence was wrong about woman
1992, Bucknell University Press, Associated University Presses, Bucknell Univ Pr
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 373-375) and index.

Published in
Lewisburg, London
Other Titles
Where DH Lawrence was wrong about woman.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
823/.912
Library of Congress
PR6023.A93 Z6316 1991, PR6023.A93Z6316 1991

The Physical Object

Pagination
380 p. ;
Number of pages
380

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1891030M
Internet Archive
wheredhlawrencew0000holb
ISBN 10
0838752071
LCCN
90056165
OCLC/WorldCat
23692692
Goodreads
580358

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History

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July 18, 2024 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
November 17, 2022 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
August 16, 2010 Edited by WorkBot merge works
April 28, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Linked existing covers to the work.
December 9, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page